Chapman
-- Small Scottish literary magazine, which has published many of Gray's
poems and short stories and for which Gray designed about 15 original
covers during the 1980s.

National
Library of Scotland -- Holds the Gray archive of personal papers,
manuscripts and drawings, which you can study (if you have permission
from Alasdair Gray himself). Also holds a searchable catalogue of the
library's stock.

People's
Palace -- Glasgow social history museum for which Gray was official
artist recorder for about 10 months in the late 1970s. Painted about 30
pictures for the museum, illustrating the community, social life and local
characters.

Glasgow
University -- Gray currently holds the post of Professor of Creative
Writing, along with James Kelman and Tom Leonard. Sounds like a pretty
good place to be studying how to write at the moment.

British
Library Document Supply Centre -- Northern outpost of the British
Library in charge of the nation's document supply and interlibrary loans.
Interestingly, it is built on the site of the munitions workers hostel
of which Alasdair Gray's father was in charge during WWII. Gray lived
here for several years when a child and went to school in Wetherby. The
BL are also publishing a book, in June 2002, entitled Alasdair Gray:
Critical Appreciations and a Bibliography, which should be very useful.

Glasgow
Print Studio -- Published Gray's first ever book, a paperback edition
of 'The Comedy of the White Dog'. It's now very expensive second-hand,
and not very common. According to one bibliography, several hundred copies
were returned to Gray in the early 1980s and destroyed.